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Public Health Interventions Applications for Public Health Nursing Practice
March 2001
Minnesota Department of HealthDivision o f Community Health ServicesPublic Health Nursing Section
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Public Health
Interventions Applications for Public Health
Nursing Practice
March 2001
Public Health Nursing Practice for the 21st CenturyProject Director: Mary Rippke, RN, MA
Project Coordinator: Laurel Briske, RN, MA, CPNPProject Staff: Linda Olson Keller, RN, MS, CS, and
Sue Strohschein, RN, MS
Administrative Assistant: Jill Simonetti
Development of this document was supported by federal grant 6 D10 HP 30392, Division
of Nursing, Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Service Administration,
United States Department of Health and Human Services.
Minnesota Department of HealthDivision of Community Health Services
Public Health Nursing Section
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Acknowledgments
Public Health Interventions: Applications for Public Health Nursing Practice
acknowledges the tremendous contribution made by practicing public health nurses (PHNs)
and educators from Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Special
thanks go to the graduate students who identified and analyzed relevant intervention literature.
Forty-six practice experts and educators from those same states volunteered to serve on review
panels, devoting hours of their time and, more importantly, their practice wisdom. An additional
150 preceptors and participants from the Public Health Nursing Practice for the 21 st
Century project provided invaluable input for clarification and richness of the content. This
document could not have happened without them. Gratitude also goes to LaVohn Josten and
Sharon Cross, School of Nursing, University of Minnesota for their insight and evaluation
expertise.
The interventions also reflect the talents and skills of many Minnesota Department of Health
staff. In particular we want to acknowledge our colleagues in the Section of Public Health Nursing, Marie Margitan, Terre St. Onge, and Karen Zilliox; Diane Jordan and the library
services’ staff; and Lisa Patenaude, former administrative assistant.
We are interested in learning more about how the model is being used or adapted. If you have
comments or questions, please contact us.
Linda Olson Keller 651/296-9176 linda.keller@health.state.mn.us
Sue Strohschein 320/650-1078 sue.strohschein@health.state.mn.us
Suggested citation: Public Health Nursing Section: Public Health Interventions–Applications for Public
Health Nursing Practice. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Health, 2001.
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Literature Search ManagersMary Jo Chippendale, University of Minnesota
Jennifer Deschaine, Bethel College
Kathy Lammers, Winona State University
Deborah Meade, Augsburg College
Jackie Meyer, University of Iowa
Dolores Severtson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Victoria Von Sadovszky, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Expert PanelistsIowa
Elaine Boes, Palo Alto County Community Health Service
Nancy Faber, Worth County Public Health
Marti Franc, Des Moines Visiting Nurse Services
Penny Leake, Winneshiek County Public Health
Therese O’Brien, Lee County Health Department
Janet Peterson, Iowa Department of Health
Jane Schadle, Wellmark Community Health Improvement
Lu Sheehy, Skill Medical Center
Jenny Terrill, Iowa Department of Health
Minnesota
Mary Kay Haas, Minnesota Nurses AssociationBonnie Brueshoff, Dakota County Public Health
Terre St. Onge, Minnesota Department of Health
Jean Rainbow, Minnesota Department of Health
Karen Zilliox, Minnesota Department of Health
Barb Mathees, Minnesota State University-Moorhead
Cecilia Erickson, Minneapolis Public Schools
Ane Rogers, Cass County Public Health
Rose Jost, Bloomington Health Department
Dorothea Tesch, Minnesota Department of Health
Nancy Vandenberg, Minnesota Department of Health
Ann Moorhous, Minnesota Department of Health
Mary Sheehan, Minnesota Department of Health
Penny Hatcher, Minnesota Department of Health
North Dakota
Ruth Bachmeier, Fargo Cass Public Health
Nancy Mosbaek, Minot State University
Cheryl Hagen, Fargo Cass Public Health
Kelly Schmidt, First District Health Unit–Minot
Debbie Swanson, Grand Forks Public Health Department
Barb Andrist, Upper Missouri District Health Unit
South Dakota Nanc y Fahrenwald, Sou th Dakota State Univer sity
Darlene Bergeleen, South Dakota Department of Health
Joan Frerichs, Grant County–Milbank
Paula Gibson, South Dakota Department of Health
WisconsinJudy Aubey, Madison Department of Public Health
Elizabeth Giese, Division of Public Health-Wisconsin
Barbara Nelson, St. Croix Health & Human Services Department
Tim Ringhand, Chippewa County Department of Public Health
Marion Reali, Eau Claire City/County Health Department
Gretchen Sampson, Polk County Health Department
Vicki Moss, Viterbo College
Joan Theurer, Wisconsin Department of Health & Family Services
Julie Willems Van Dijk, Marathon County Health Department
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions1
Public Health Nursing Interventions
Public health nurses (PHNs) work in schools, homes, clinics, jails, shelters, out of mobile vans and dog sleds.
They work with communities, the individuals and families that compose communities, and the systems that
impact the health of those communities. Regardless of where PHNs work or whom they work with, all public
health nurses use a core set of interventions to accomplish their goals.
I nterventions are actions that PHNs take on behal f of individuals, fami li es, systems, and
communit ies to improve or protect health status.
This framework, known as the “intervention model,” defines the scope of public health nursing practice by type
of intervention and level of practice (systems, community, individual/family), rather than by the more traditional
“site” of service, that is, home visiting nurse, school nurse, occupational health nurse, clinic nurse, etc. The
intervention model describes the scope of practice by what is similar across settings and describes the work of
public health nursing at the community and systems practice levels as well as the conventional individual/family
level. These interventions are not exclusive to public health nursing as they are also used by other public health
disciplines. The public health intervention model does represent public health nursing as a specialty practice of nursing. (See The Cornerstones of Public Health Nursing, Appendix A)
An enlarged black and white copy of the wheel can be found in Appendix B.
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1Williams, C. A., Highriter, M. E. (1978). Community health nursing–population and practice. Public Health
Reviews, 7 (4), 201.
Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions2
The Intervention Wheel
The model, or the “intervention wheel,” as it has come to be known, integrates three distinct and equally
important components:
1. The population-basis of all public health interventions
2. The three levels of public health practice:Community
Systems
Individual/family
3. The 17 public health interventions:
Surveillance
Disease and Health Threat Investigation
Outreach
Screening
Case-Finding
Referral and Follow-up
Case Management
Delegated Functions
Health Teaching
Counseling
Consultation
Collaboration
Coalition Building
Community organizing
Advocacy
Social Marketing
Policy Development and Enforcement
The model itself consists of a darkened outside ring, three inner rings and seventeen “slices.” Each of the inner rings of the model are labeled “population-based,” indicating that all public health interventions are population-
based. A population is a collection of individuals who have one or more personal or environmental
characteristics in common.1 A population-of-interest is a population that is essentially healthy, but who could
improve factors that promote or protect health. A population-at-risk is a population with a common identified risk
factor or risk-exposure that poses a threat to health.
1. Public health interventions are population-based if they focus on entire populations possessing
similar health concerns or characteristics.
This means focusing on everyone actually or potentially impacted by the condition or who share a
similar characteristic. Population-based interventions are not limited to only those who seek service or
who are poor or otherwise vulnerable. Population-based planning always begins by identifying
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2 Population-based practice assessment, planning and evaluation model. (1999). CHS planning guidelines.Minnesota Department of Health (attached as an Appendix).
3 Institute of Medicine. (1988). The future of public health. Washington DC: National Academy Press.
4See, for instance, Evans, R. G., & Stoddard, G. L. (1990). Producing health, consuming health care. Social
Science and Medicine, 31, 1347-1363, or, Wilkinson, R., & Marmot, M. (1998). Social determinants of health: The
solid facts. World Health Organization. Available http://www.who.uk/document/e59555.pdf .
5Turnock, B. (1997). Public health: What it is and how it works. Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen Publishers.
Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions3
everyone who is in the population-of-interest or the population-at-risk. For example, it is a core
public health function to assure that all children are immunized against vaccine-preventable disease.
Even though limited resources may compel public health departments to target programs toward those
children known to be at particular risk for being under or unimmunized, the public health system
remains accountable for the immunization status of the total population of children.
2. Public health interventions are population-based if they are guided by an assessment of population health status that is determined through a community health assessment process.
A population-based model of practice analyzes health status (risk factors, problems, protective
factors, assets) within populations, establishes priorities, and plans, implements, and evaluates public
health programs and strategies.2 The importance of community assessment cannot be emphasized
enough. All public health programs are based on the needs of the community. As communities
change, so do community needs. This is why the core function of assessment is so important.3 Public
health agencies need to assess the health status of populations on an ongoing basis, so that public
health programs respond appropriately to new and emerging problems, concerns, and opportunities.
3. Public health interventions are population-based if they consider the broad determinants of health.
A population-based approach examines all factors that promote or prevent health. It focuses on the
entire range of factors that determine health, rather than just personal health risks or disease.
Examples of health determinants include income and social status, housing, nutrition, employment and
working conditions, social support networks, education, neighborhood safety and violence issues,
physical environment, personal health practices and coping skills, cultural customs and values, and
community capacity to support family and economic growth.4
4. Public health interventions are population-based if they consider all levels of prevention, with
a preference for primary prevention.Prevention is anticipatory action taken to prevent the occurrence of an event or to minimize its effect
after it has occurred.5 A population approach is different from the medical model in which persons
seek treatment when they are ill or injured. Not every event is preventable, but every event does have
a preventable component. Thus, a population-based approach presumes that prevention may occur at
any point–before a problem occurs, when a problem has begun but before signs and symptoms
appear, or even after a problem has occurred.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions4
Primary prevention both promotes health and protects against threats to health. It keeps problems
from occurring in the first place. It promotes resiliency and protective factors or reduces susceptibility
and exposure to risk factors. Primary prevention is implemented before a problem develops. It
targets essentially well populations. Primary prevention promotes health, such as building assets in
youth, or keeps problems from occurring, for example, immunizing for vaccine-preventable diseases.
Secondary prevention detects and treats problems in their early stages. It keeps problems fromcausing serious or long-term effects or from affecting others. It identifies risks or hazards and
modifies, removes, or treats them before a problem becomes mroe serious. Secondary prevention is
implemented after a problem has begun, but before signs and symptoms appear. It targets populations
that have risk factors in common. Secondary prevention detects and treats problems early, such as
screening for home safety and correcting hazards before an injury occurs.
Tertiary prevention limits further negative effects from a problem. It keeps existing problems from
getting worse. It alleviates the effects of disease and injury and restores individuals to their optimal
level of functioning. Tertiary prevention is implemented after a disease or injury has occurred. It
targets populations who have experienced disease or injury. Tertiary prevention keeps existing problems from getting worse, for instance, collaborating with health care providers to assure periodic
examinations to prevent complications of diabetes such as blindness, renal disease failure, and limb
amputation.
Whenever possible, public health programs emphasize primary prevention.
5. Public health interventions are population-based if they consider all levels of practice. This
concept is represented by the inner three rings of the model. The inner rings of the model
are labeled community-focused, systems-focused, and individual/family-focused.
A population-based approach considers intervening at all possible levels of practice. Interventionsmay be directed at the entire population within a community, the systems that affect the health of those
populations, and/or the individuals and families within those populations known to be at risk.
Population-based community-focused practice changes community norms, community attitudes,
community awareness, community practices, and community behaviors. They are directed toward
entire populations within the community or occasionally toward target groups within those populations.
Community-focused practice is measured in terms of what proportion of the population actually
changes.
Population-based systems-focused practice changes organizations, policies, laws, and power
structures. The focus is not directly on individuals and communities but on the systems that impact
health. Changing systems is often a more effective and long-lasting way to impact population health
than requiring change from every single individual in a community.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions5
Population-based individual-focused practice changes knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, practices, and
behaviors of individuals. This practice level is directed at individuals, alone or as part of a family,
class, or group. Individuals receive services because they are identified as belonging to a population-
at-risk.
Interventions at each of these levels of practice contribute to the overall goal of improving population
health status. Public health professionals determine the most appropriate level(s) of practice based oncommunity need and the availability of effective strategies and resources. No one level of practice is
more important than another; in fact, most public health problems are addressed at all three levels,
often simultaneously. Consider, for example, smoking rates, which continue to rise among the
adolescent population. At the community level of practice, public health nurses coordinate youth led,
adult supported, social marketing campaigns intending to change the community norms regarding
adolescents’ tobacco use. At the systems level of practice, public health nurses facilitate community
coalitions that advocate city councils to create stronger ordinances restricting over-the-counter youth
access to tobacco. At the individual/ family practice level, public health nurses tach middle school
chemical health classes that increase knowledge about the risks of smoking, change attitudes toward
tobacco use, and improve “refusal skills” among youth 12-14 years of age.
The interventions are grouped with related interventions; these “wedges” are color coordinated to make them
more recognizable. For instance, in practice, the five interventions in the red (pink) wedge are frequently
implemented in conjunction with one another. Surveillance is often paired with disease and health event
investigation, even though either can be implemented independently. Screening frequently follows either
surveillance or disease and health event investigation and is often preceded by outreach activities in order to
maximize the number of those at risk who actually get screened. Most often, screening leads to case-finding,
but this intervention can also be carried out independently or related directly to surveillance and disease and
health event investigation. The green wedge consists of referral and follow-up, case management, and
delegated functions–three interventions which, in practice, are often implemented together. Similarly, healthteaching, counseling, and consultation (the blue wedge) are more similar than they are different; health
teaching and counseling are especially often paired. The interventions in the orange wedge –collaboration,
coalition building, and community organizing–while distinct, are grouped together because they are all types of
collective action and all most often carried out at systems or community levels of practice. Similarly,
advocacy, social marketing, and policy development and enforcement (the yellow wedge) are often
interrelated when implemented. In fact, advocacy is often viewed as a precursor to policy development; social
marketing is seen by some as a method of carrying out advocacy.
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6Keller, Strohschein, Lia-Hoagberg, & Schaffer. (1998). Population-based public health nursing
interventions: A model from practice. Public Health Nursing, 15(3), 207-215.
7Harrell, J. A. & Baher, E. L. (1994). The essential services of public health. Leadership in Public Health,
3(3), 27-31.
Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions6
Where did this model come from?
Health care reform in the 1990s challenged public health nurses to define their contribution to improving
population health. In response, the Section of Public Health Nursing at the Minnesota Department of Health
constructed a set of interventions that public health nurses use in their practice. The model began as a set of
examples of PHN practice collected in 1994 from over 200 experienced Minnesota PHNs. A panel of
practice experts from the section identified the common themes within those examples–and the initial set of interventions (Public Health Interventions: Examples from Public Health Nursing, October 1997) was created,
depicted as spokes of a wheel. Hundreds of copies of the interventions were distributed within the state and
throughout the nation. Reports from PHNs using Interventions I suggested the framework could be quickly
adopted to both teach and enrich practice.6
The initial interventions framework was practice-based. In July 1998, the Section began intensive work to
determine the evidence underlying the interventions. With the award of a grant from the federal Division of
Nursing, current public health nursing, nursing, public health, and related literature were explored to identify the
theory, research, and expert opinion supporting and enhancing the interventions. In June 1999, forty-six public
health nursing practice experts and academics from Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, andWisconsin participated in a consensus meeting and created the bases of the revised intervention set. The
recommendations of the regional experts were reviewed and critiqued by a national panel of public health
nursing experts. The model withstood the challenge of rigorous examination with only a few changes to the
original set of 17. The results of that process are presented in this document. (See Appendix C)
What Is the Relationship Between the Interventions Wheel and
the Core Public Health Functions/Essential Services?7
Public health nurses fulfill the public health’s essential services by implementing interventions to address publichealth problems and opportunities identified through a community assessment. The specific set of interventions
selected and implemented will vary from community to community, from population to population, from
problem to problem, and from department to department. Additionally, PHNs will most often accomplish
these as part of a team with members from other public health disciplines and other community partners.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions7
Interventions are activities taken by PHNs on behalf of communities
and the individuals and families living in them.
Assumptions about al l PHN Interventions...
" They are population-based; that is, they:
Sare focused on an entire population
Sare guided by an assessment of community health
Sconsider broad determinants of health
Sconsider all levels of prevention
Sconsider all levels of practice
" The public health nursing process applies at all levels of practice.
How to Use This Framework:
Population-based PHN Interventions at Three Practice Levels
Each of the seventeen interventions is presented separately, using the same format, to increase their usefulness.
Here are the components:
1. Definition of an “intervention” and underlying assumptions.At the top of each intervention’s first page is the same set of information in a box. This box
contains the definition of an “intervention” and the practice assumptions which underlie it,
regardless of where it is implemented, or at what level. This box serves as a reminder to the user
and includes:
Definition of an Intervention:
Interventions are actions taken by PHNs on behalf of communities and the
individuals/families living in them.
2. Definition of the specific intervention.
Next is the “definition” of each intervention. For example:
Screening identifies individuals with unrecognized health risk factors or
asymptomatic disease conditions in populations.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions8
3. Example at all practice levels.
Under each definition are examples from public health nursing practice. The intervention is
applied at the community, systems, and individual/family levels to a given population and a
problem. For example:
4. Relationship to other interventions...
Next you will find a description of the relationship of that particular intervention to the others. Remember that
interventions may be implemented alone or in conjunction with other interventions. For example:
Case Management Population-of-interest: All children with special health care needs and their families
Problem: Fragmented service delivery system
Communi ty Example:
A PHN works with a local advocacy organization to present programs about
the rights of children under the American Disability Act (ADA) to various
parents groups within the community. The programs emphasize potential roles
for parents to advocate on their children’s behalf.
Systems Example:
A variety of professionals who provide services to children with special
needs, including public health nursing and school nursing, cooperativelydesign a centralized intake process to simplify access to services for children
with special needs.
I ndividual/F amily Example:
A PHN serves a family with a school-aged boy who uses a wheelchair due to
his cerebral palsy. The PHN assists the boy’s parents and their primary care
practitioner in negotiating a plan to meet the child’s educational and
physical needs during the school day with the school district.
Relationships to Other Interventions
Policy development and enforcement relates to a variety of other interventions. Since its intent is to bring
health issues to the attention of decision-makers for the purpose of changing laws, rules, regulations,
ordinances, and policies, it is frequently paired with the other interventions operating predominantly at the
community or systems practice levels, such as collaboration, coalition building, and especially community
organizing. The system’s level of health teaching, provider education, often follows policy development and precedes or is implemented in conjunction with policy enforcement. Advocacy is a frequent co-intervention at
this level. In contagious disease outbreaks, policy development and enforcement is frequently paired with
surveillance, disease and health event investigation, screening, outreach, case-finding, referral and follow-
up, and case management. At the individual/family level, policy development is often paired with health
teaching, counseling, consultation, case management, and advocacy.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions9
BASIC STEPS for Counseling
Working alone or with others, PHNs...
1. Meet the “client”–the individual, family, system, or community.
2. Explore the issues.
3. Identify priorities.
4. Establish the emotional context.
5. Identify alternative solutions .
6. Agree on a contract.
7. Support the individual, family, system, or community through the change .8. End the relationship.
Best Practices for Advocacy
• foster the development of the client’s capacity to advocate on their own behalf .
• use mass media in conjunction with advocacy.
• assume the adversarial role when appropriate.
• exhibit self-confidence, strength of conviction, and a commitment to social justice .
5. Basic Steps
Next is a list of basic steps describing how to implement this intervention. The basic steps are
particularly useful for new PHNs or for PHNs taking on new assignments requiring new skills.
While most of the interventions have one set of basic steps for all three levels, some
(collaboration, referral and follow-up, case management, and health teaching) have basic steps
for individual/family separate from those for community/systems. For example:
6. Best Practices
“Best practices” are derived from the theory, research, and expert opinion reviewed by the
expert panel. The best practices are a combination of what the literature suggests and the
collective wisdom of the expert panelists who considered them. A PHN’s success in
implementing an intervention should be increased if the best practices are considered. Best practices foster excellence in intervention implementation. For example:
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions10
7. Notes from Abby...
You will find “Notes from Abby...” throughout this document. “Abby” is a real-
life PHN from the mid-1920s who exemplifies public health nursing. She is the
logo for the Division of Nursing grant. Her “notes” include resources, tips, and
related research findings for enhancing public health nursing practice. Her “words
of wisdom” are geared for the PHN who has had some experience with that
particular intervention.
8. Best Evidence
The “best evidence” contains citations and abstracts for the articles and texts that were reviewed by
the expert panel. This evidence supports the best practices. It is organized into review articles,
research reports, expert opinion, and texts and monographs. The scores from the expert panelists are
included in the abstracts. An example:
Best Evidence for Coalition Building
Review Articles
Wandersman, A., Goodman, R., & Butterfoss, F. (1997). Understanding coalitions and how they
operate: An “open systems” organizational framework. In M. Minkler (Ed.), Communi ty
organizing and community buil ding for health (pp. 261-277). New York: Rutgers Univ. Press.
The authors suggest it is useful to think of coalitions (and partnerships and consortia) as organizations and
apply Katz and Kahn’s open-systems framework to advance the understanding of them. Coalitions are
defined as “interorganizational, cooperative, and synergistic working alliances” (p. 263) which serve
several purposes. [Note: Katz, D. & Kahn, R. (1978). The social psychology of organizations (2nd ed.).
New York: Wiley.]
Review=34%Research Reports
Parker, E., Eng, E., Laraia, B., et al. (1998). Coalition building for prevention: Lessons learned
from the North Carolina community-based public health initiative. J Publi c Health Management
Practice, 4 (2), 25-36.
The authors identify six factors important to coalition functioning and success, based on findings of a four-
year observation of four separate North Carolina county coalitions funded by the Kellogg Foundation’s
Community-Based Public Health Initiative. Rather than focusing on a specific disease category to
prevent, this study looks at aspects of coalition development itself. The authors apply Alter and Hage’s
framework for conceptualizing how stages and levels of collaboration are operationalized in coalition
functioning and found the six factors which effected it.
Qualitative=68.5%
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions11
9. How to use these interventions...
In general , the intervention framework provides PHNs with a reasoned, systematic approach to
practice.
‚ Use the basic steps to make sure that you are making the most effective use of your time.
‚ Use these interventions for problem solving when you are stuck or your strategies are not
going as you had expected.‚ Apply the best practices for planning and evaluating public health nursing interventions.
Specifically, this framework can be used for:
‚ program planning to assure that all three levels of intervention are considered (that is, have
you considered interventions at the community, systems, and individual/family levels)
‚ examining the scope of an agency’s practice
Do the programs delivered by PHNs cover the entire scope of practice? Are
there certain interventions or levels not used?
‚ describing public health nursing’s contribution to collaboration or coalition building
‚ explaining public health nursing to other disciplines and community members‚ orienting new PHN staff
‚ building and enhancing intervention skills with PHN staff
‚ determining what changes may be evaluated (health status or intermediate changes at the
community, systems, and individual/family levels) as a result of the intervention.
In addition, many schools of nursing have found this framework useful in teaching public health
nursing interventions.
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions12
This page has been intentionally left blank.
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Public Health
Interventions Applications for PublicHealth Nursing Practice
Surveillance
Public Health Nursing Practice for the 21st Century March 2001
For Further Information please contact:
Linda Olson Keller at: linda.keller@health.state.mn.us orSue Strohschein at: sue.strohschein@health.state.mn.us
Development of this document was supported by federal grant 6 D10 HP 30392, Divisionof Nursing, Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Service Administration,United States Department of Health and Human Services.
Minnesota Department of HealthDivision of Community Health Services
Public Health Nursing Section
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8Guidelines for evaluating surveillance systems. (1988, May 6). MMWR, 37 (S-5), 1A.
Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions13
Interventions are activities taken by PHNs on behalf of communities
and the individuals and families living in them.
Assumptions about all PHN Interventions...
" They are population-based; that is, they:
Sare focused on an entire population
Sare guided by an assessment of community health
Sconsider broad determinants of health
Sconsider all levels of prevention
Sconsider all levels of practice
" The public health nursing process applies at all levels of practice.
INTERVENTION: SURVEILLANCE
DefinitionSurveillance describes and monitors health events through ongoing and systematic collection,
analysis, and interpretation of health data for the purpose of planning, implementing, and evaluating
public health interventions.8
Examples at All Practice Levels
Population-of-interest: All children
Problem: Developmental delays that prohibit optimal growth
Communi ty Example:
Parents participate in a follow-along program that identifies children from birth-48 months who
are at risk of experiencing health or developmental problems. Parents are solicited to participatein the program at the birth of their child. The child is initially assessed at enrollment in the
program. Parents complete mailed questionnaires about their child’s development at 4, 8, 12, 16,
20, 24, 30, and 36 months. They return the questionnaire and are contacted if it reveals any delays.
Those not returning questionnaires are sent two reminders. If no response is received, the PHN
contacts the family.
Systems Example: The public health agency provides the central intake function for children with special needs for the entire county.
Physicians, schools, the local follow-along program, public health nurses, social workers, and others refer children.
Intake PHNs attend weekly meetings with the multi- disciplinary early intervention team, which includes public
health nursing, speech, occupational therapy, special ed, social work, and others. The team determines who will
coordinate the initial assessment and service plan. The PHNs’ central intake responsibilities include compiling
quarterly reports on the types of special needs that are being referred, the timeliness of the team response, and the
types of services the child and family ultimately received .
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Section of Public Health Nursing Public Health
Minnesota Department of Health Interventions14
I ndividual/Famil y Example: [Case-F inding]
The results of a questionnaire returned by a parent of an eight-month-old infant suggested possible
delays in some developmental areas. This triggered the PHN to make an appointment to see the
parents in their home. After administering the Denver Developmental Screening Tool-II, the PHN
discussed the results with the parents and answered their questions and concerns. Various referral
options for further assessment were established.
Relationships to Other Interventions
Surveillance focuses on significant health threats such as contagious diseases but is also used with other
health events such as chronic diseases, injury, and violence. Like investigation of disease and other health
events, surveillance collects and analyzes health data. Unlike investigation, however, surveillance is an
ongoing process which detects trends and seeks to identify changes in the incidence (that is, the occurrence of
new cases over a set period of time) and prevalence (that is, the combined number of old and new cases at
any one point in time). Many texts treat surveillance and investigation of disease and health events as a single
intervention.
Surveillance is often confused with monitoring and/or screening. It is important to differentiate.
Surveillance...
•is used to assess population health status
before and after health events
•looks at whole populations
Surveillance...
•measures the population health status
•may serve as the method to track cases
Monitoring...
•implies a constant adjustment of what is
being done
•looks at specific groups or individuals
Screening...
•detects previously unknown cases in a
population
•may serve as the method to find cases
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9Adapted from Teutsch, S., & Churchill, R.E. (1994). Principles and practice of public health surveillance.
New York: Oxford Press.
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BASIC STEPS for Surveillance9
Working alone or with others, PHNs...
1. First consider whether surveillance is appropriate for the circumstances.
Consider some or all of the following:• importance of the problem as a threat to population health
• need to learn more about the problem, its patterns of occurrence, and the populations at risk
• need to establish baseline data (very often the trigger to implement surveillance) and determine the extent
to which available data are inadequate.
2. Acquire necessary knowledge of the problem, its natural course, and its aftermath
The PHN should make sure that their knowledge about the problem is up to date and complete. An
understanding of the problem’s “natural course of history” is especially important. This is the course that the
condition would predictably take if nothing were done to intercede. For example, progressive pulmonary
tuberculosis kills 50 percent of those infected within 5 years if left untreated. Dental caries continue to decaywithout treatment. Children with amblyopia, without treatment, eventually lose vision in the affected eye.
At times, urgency for public health action to prevent negative impacts on health status means making
decisions before exact causes are known. Often, PHNs must rely on epidemiological evidence that supports
strong associations between risk factors rather than waiting for research findings.
3. Establish clear criteria for what constitutes a “case.”
Criteria include person, place, and time (that is, who is at risk, where the event occurs, and when it occurs).
4. Collect sufficient data from multiple valid sources.
• Use existing data sets to provide data for surveillance whenever feasible. The PHN should consider
data readily available in your agency or community such as vital records,
hospital-discharge data, medical-management-information and billing systems, police records, school
records, etc.
• Check existing registries and surveys for data useful to the population-of-interest.
• Do not reveal personal identifiers; PHNs must assure confidentiality and protection of privacy.
5. Analyze data using appropriate scientific and epidemiological principles.
The level of analysis required varies from condition to condition. In general, analyses includes such elements
as:
• an assessment of the crude number of cases (that is, the number of actual cases) and rates (the number
of cases per a given denominator, such as 100 persons or 10,000 or 100,000)
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• a description of the population in which the condition occurs (for example, age, gender, race, and
ethnicity)
• where the condition occurs
• the period of time over which the condition occurs.
6. Interpret and disseminate the data in such a way that decision-makers at all levels can readilyidentify and understand the implications.
This means the dissemination plan must be developed to fit the intended data users. Disseminate the
information on a regular basis, not just during times of crisis.
7. Evaluate the impact of the surveillance system:
• Was the data collected sufficient to support accurate analysis?
• Did it generate answers to problems?
• Was the information timely?
• Was it useful to those interested?
• How was the information used?• How can it be made of greater use?
Notes from Abby
The February 2000 issue of the AAOHN Journal (Vol. 48, No. 2) includes a series of articles describing
surveillance and screening interventions as “vital roles” for the PHN working in occupational and environmental
health. See Pap, E., & Miller, A. Screening and surveillance: OSHA’s medical surveillance provisions, pp. 59-
72; Stone, D. Health surveillance for health care workers: A vital role for the occupational and environmentalhealth nurse, pp. 73-79; Rogers, B., & Livsey, K. Occupational health, surveillance, screening, and prevention
in occupational health nursing practice, pp. 92-99.
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Notes from Abby
Classifications of Surveillance Systems
Surveillance systems usually exemplify one of each of the following classifications. For instance, a cancer
surveillance system is usually passive, ongoing, and formal.
1. Surveillance systems are conventionally classified as either passive or active.
Passive:
Systems in which the health jurisdiction (that is, federal, state, or local health departments) receive reports of
disease or health events from physicians or other individuals or institutions often mandated by state law.
States’ reportable disease systems are examples. Most surveillance systems are passive.
Active:
Systems in which the health jurisdiction regularly contacts reporting sources to elicit reports, including negative
reports (that is, no cases). Active systems collect more complete data but are labor-intensive and, therefore,
expensive to implement. They are usually only indicated in unusual or unpredictable circumstances, such asevidence of a new or rarely seen pathogen.
2. Surveillance systems may be either ongoing or time-limited.
Ongoing:
Systematic collection of data over time on selected diseases or health events that impact the health of the
population. Examples include registries (for example, immunization, birth defect, cancer) or child maltreatment
and vulnerable adult reporting systems. Sentinel surveillance systems are special cases of surveillance that
track single key health indicators in the general or special populations. A sentinel health event is a “case of
unnecessary disease, unnecessary disability, or untimely death whose occurrence is a warning signal that the
quality of preventive and/or medical...care may need to be improved.”* For example, an infant death from
methemoglobinemia is a sentinel event for water contamination, as is the occurrence of mesothelioma for
asbestos exposure, a maternal death from any cause, or an outbreak of rubeola.
Time-Limited:
Systematic collection of data on specific problems or concerns for a specific time period. This may identify all
cases in order to assess the level of risk or threat or, when resources are limited, estimate the size through
sampling. Most active surveillance systems are limited systems. For example, a state instituted a “rash”
surveillance system in a recent rubella outbreak among a migrant Hispanic population, but only for a few
months.
*Seligman, & Frazier. (1992). Surveillance: The public health approach. In Baker and Monson (Eds.) Public health surveillance (pp. 16-25). NY: Vaurbstrand Reinhold. As quoted in Friis, & Sellars. (1996). Epidemiology for public health
practice (p. 359). Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen Publishers.
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Notes from Abby
Classifications of Surveillance Systems (continued)
3. Surveillance systems may be formal or informal.
Formal:
Systems with multiple reporters, frequently mandated by law and most often at the state or federal levels of
government. Events selected for development of formal systems meet all or most of the following criteria:
• Frequency (that is, a combination of incidence, prevalence, mortality, and years of potential life lost
(YPLL)
• Severity (that is, case-fatality ratio, hospitalization rates, disability rates)
• Cost (both direct and indirect)
• Preventability
• Communicability (that is, the risk of spread from person to person)
• Public interest.
Informal:
Surveillance can also be an informal process of systematic data collection, often in conjunction with case-
finding. Implementing the surveillance intervention can be as simple as regularly reviewing the case records in
your drawer or laptop to determine what similarities they might have. The PHN is a trained observer, the “eyes
and ears on the community,” always looking for events, changes, and trends in the community that may impact
population health status.
Examples of informal surveillance include:
• PHN day care consultants initiate a system to collect data on the prevalence and incidence of
peanut allergies in young children (ages birth-7) in day care after they observe a dramatic
increase in the numbers of day care centers requesting consultation on how to respond to peanut
allergy reactions.
• At a staff meeting, a PHN who serves children with special needs remarked on how many
children in her caseload were multiple births resulting from some sort of technology such as
fertility treatments or in vitro fertilization. Several other PHNs commented that they were seeing
the same thing in their caseloads. The PHNs decided to initiate a agency-wide data collection
system to track this data over time.
• PHNs expand their senior clinic assessment by adding an item asking about involvement in motor
vehicle crashes after noticing the large number of residents with poor vision and hearing who still
hold drivers’ licenses.
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Notes from Abby
Surveillance and Epidemiology
Surveillance, as with the disease and other health event investigation, requires PHNs to use epidemiology,the science of public health. Epidemiology is “the study of the distribution and determinants of diseases and
injuries in human populations.” Mausner, J.S. & Kramer, S. (1985). Epidemiology: An introductory text (2nd ed.).
Philadelphia: WB Saunders, p. 1. The conventional epidemiology model is the “epidemiology triangle:” [Ibid, p. 33]
• agent = whatever is thought to cause the disease or risk
• host = whatever is affected by the agent
• environment = all the factors external to the host and agent which allow or promote the disease or risk.
The model is commonly used to explain infectious* disease transmission, such as Lyme Disease. In this disease,
• the agent = the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi, which is transmitted by the bite of infected deer ticks (in
the Northeastern and North-Central US) and western black-legged ticks (on the Pacific Coast)
• the host = humans and other mammals
• the environment = the woods and overgrown brush or residential sites bordering these areas.
The epidemiological triangle may also be used to explain behavioral risk factors and other threats to health, such
as obesity. In this condition:
• the agent or causal factor = an imbalance between caloric intake and kilocalories burned through
physical activity
• the host = the person who is born with certain metabolic characteristics as well as learned (i.e., behavioral) characteristics such as eating and exercise habits
• the environment = all the social factors promoting overeating and underexercising, such as fast food
establishments, 32-ounce servings of soda, sedentary lifestyle, lack of safe walking trails.
Regardless of the disease or event, using the agent-host-environment model to organize the information collected
can help identify connections or patterns. These points of connection often serve as the focal points for
prevention strategies.
*infectious - communicable conditions (i.e., diseases) caused by microbes, such as bacteria or viruses
communicable - a condition that readily spreads from person to person
contagious - a condition that is very communicable, or which spreads rapidly from person to person
[From: Bacteriophage Ecology Group glossary at ]
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BEST PRACTICES for Surveillance
Best practices are recommendations promoting excellence in implementing this intervention. When PHNs
consider the following statements, the likelihood of their success is enhanced. The best practices come
from a panel of expert public health nursing educators and practitioners who developed theory blending
from the literature with their practical expertise. These best practices are not presented in any ranking or particular order; each may not apply to every implementation of the intervention.
1. IDENTIFIES AND UTILIZES SUCCESSFUL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS.
Best Evidence: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1988
Recognized attributes of successful surveillance systems include:
‚ simplicity of design and flexibility in data collection that allow changes to the system without adding cost to the
process
‚ acceptability to those participating
‚sensitivity, in that they detect what they are supposed to
‚ predictiveness, or the extent to which the rates found can be trusted to apply to a larger or different group
‚ representativeness, or the quality of the data (including sufficiency)
‚ timeliness, or the speed between steps in the process.
2. PERFORMS THE ROLES WARRANTED BY THE SPECIFIC CIRCUMSTANCES AND
AGENCY RESOURCES.
Best Evidence: panel recommendation based on practice expertise
Roles in surveillance include leader, contributor, or user of information. At times the PHN may assume multipleroles within the same surveillance process. If the PHN is involved in infectious disease surveillance, for instance,
the PHN may well participate in the collection of data from suspected cases (contributor role) and, based on
analysis of that data, determine what appropriate next steps might be (user role).
However, PHNs should also keep in mind that implementing surveillance does not need a large and complex
system if the problem is not large and complex. Relying on data routinely collected in the course of a workday
can be extremely useful. For instance, by tracking the addresses of clients who constantly do not keep clinic
appointments and connecting them with availability of public transportation, patterns may be noted that might lead
to different conclusions than “willful noncompliance.”
The critical issue in the surveillance intervention is to assure that data collected must be consistently and reliably
recorded in order for it to be used. Remember the old axiom from nursing documentation, “What doesn’t get
recorded doesn’t count.” The same applies here.
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3. DESIGNS SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS (FORMAL OR INFORMAL) THAT UTILIZE
MULTIPLE DATA SOURCES WHICH INCLUDE PERSON, PLACE AND TIME
ELEMENTS.
Best Evidence: Teutsch & Churchill; Valanis; Stroup & Teutsch; Swanson and Nies
Numerous useful data bases exist; PHNs implementing surveillance need to be at least familiar with the following
data bases for the populations they serve:
‚ vital statistics (birth and death numbers and rates, marriages, and dissolutions/annulments)
‚ maternal and child health statistics (fetal and infant mortality, birth weight, maternal mortality)
‚ census data (population size and change, age, gender, race and ethnicity, residence location, housing stock)
‚ registries (immunization, cancer, etc.)
‚ surveys
‚ administrative data sets (for example, hospital discharge data).
4. UTILIZES DATA COLLECTION METHODS THAT ARE INTEGRATED,
COLLABORATIVE, COORDINATED, AND GENERATE USEFUL DATA.
Best Evidence: Meservy, Bass & Toth; Pottinger, Herwaldt & Perl; Stroup & Teutsch; Bakhshi; Meriwether
Surveillance is most effective when done in conjunction with other systems in the community (for example, the
health care system, education, or social services) and/or with interest groups also concerned about the same
problem. Collaborating on data collection has advantages:
‚ access to other data sets such as those routinely used by education systems or hospital or ambulatory care
facilities
‚ potential to design coordinated data collection systems among the partners from the start of a process (rather
than each system collecting their own data), which insures comparability for analysis
‚ potential for shared technological capacity‚ discussion with collaborators regarding the measures or indicators to collect invariably leads to discussion and
clarification of the reasons and concerns leading to the collection; this, in turn, leads to a stronger product
and greater commitment among those involved.
While all authors cited noted the advantages of collaboration, Meriwether perhaps states it most clearly. She
reports on the 1996 the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists’ recommendation to the CDC that it
develop a national surveillance system with improved capacity and flexibility. Among the nine principles noted is
the requirement for “collaboration within and across systems.”
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10 Bringing together different disciplines adds multiple perspectives to the understanding of the situationand possible responses. It may also add confusion. The three-level model of prevention cited above is commonly
understood by most public health professionals. However, other disciplines use these same terms with very
different meanings.
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5. COLLECTS DATA WHICH SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIES AT
MULTIPLE LEVELS OF PREVENTION.
Best Evidence: Meservy, Bass & Toth; Halperin; Spradley & Allender
Given that effectiveness of public health strategies is almost always designed with the three levels of prevention in
mind, surveillance systems should also yield data that reflect those levels– primary, secondary, and tertiary.
Although limited resources often force public health to deal with immediate issues at the expense of long-term
prevention, the more PHNs can anticipate a disease or health event, the more likely they can design effective
counter measures. The most effective strategies, that is, primary prevention prevent an event from occurring in
the first place. The classic examples of primary prevention are vaccinating against infectious diseases, chlorinating
public water supplies to prevent pathogen growth, and promoting optimum nutrition to prevent anemia in pregnant
women.
Not all health events are preventable. Natural disasters cannot be prevented, but public health can reduce the
severity of their impact by taking preventive measures. Building levees to control floods, for instance, or
designating tornado shelters for residents of trailer home parks lessen the impact. In these circumstances, public
health usually calls the measures “mitigation” rather than “prevention.”10
6. SEEKS OUT AND UTILIZES SURVEILLANCE DATA TO INFLUENCE POLICY
DEVELOPMENT.
Best Evidence: Stroup and Teutsch; Mercy, Ikeda & Powell; Peterson & Chen; Pottinger, Herwaldt & Perl
A primary reason for implementing surveillance is to support action. Implementing and maintaining surveillance is
a waste of resources if it is not used to change something. In fact, Stroup and Teutsch suggest that the analysis,
interpretation, and use of the data (i.e., the changes) is the defining difference between surveillance and data
collection systems (p. 22). The change may be small, such as altering agency policy on scheduling immunizationclinic hours. Or it may be large: allowing the use of public assistance funds to pay for telephone service for
families with medically fragile children results in reduced emergency room utilization, since the families can call the
emergency room first to determine whether or not the child needs to be seen.
The literature search also revealed surveillance issues related to special populations or problems. For instance,
Peterson and Chen report that minor changes to a case definition of undernutrition can lead to significantly
different policy paths. Similar implications for firearm-related injury prevention policy are described by Mercy,
Ikeda, and Powell. They illustrate that, although developing useful systems is complex, once completed, such
systems are extremely useful in designing strategies at multiple levels. Pottinger and others discuss infectious
disease surveillance in a hospital setting and, in doing so, illustrate how this data is useful in establishing hospital policy.
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Notes from Abby
For PHNs interested in further developing their knowledge and skills in surveillance, CDC offers a training
manual used in conjunction with Teutsch and Churchill’s book. The 14-lesson web-based course is called
“Surveillance in a Suitcase,” and includes two work exercises. Contact: www.cdc.gov/epo/surveillancein/
The Internet allows access to numerous data bases. For starters, take a look at the variety available from the
National Center for Health Statistics at www.cdc.gov/nchs. Many of the data bases also have direct links to
state- and county-level related data.
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BEST EVIDENCE for Surveillance Each item was first reviewed for research quality and integrity by graduate students in public health
nursing and then critiqued for its application to practice by at least two members of a panel of practice and
academic experts. The nature of the material and a score expressed as a percentage are included at the
end of each annotated citation. The percentage is the average of scores assessed by the experts who
reviewed it. It reflects their opinion of the strength of the item’s contribution to practice.
Review Articlesnone
Research Reportsnone
Expert Opinion
Meservy, D., Bass, J., & Toth, W. (1997, October). Health surveillance: Effective components of asuccessful program. AAOHN JOURNAL, 45 (10), 500-512.
The authors, writing from an occupational health perspective, define occupational health surveillance as the process
of systematically monitoring the health status of worker populations to gather data about the effects of workplace
exposures and using the data to prevent illness or injury. The purpose is to link workplace exposures to adverse
health outcomes and, thus, design control measure to prevent illness and injury in other individuals” (p. 500).
Screening and monitoring are seen as surveillance’s two major components. Surveillance is described as a special
application of the nursing process: assessment=exposures; diagnosis=populations, rather than individuals;
planning=answers to the questions of who should be screened, for what, how often, what will be done with results,
and referral mechanisms in place; implementation=integration of health education; evaluation=outcomes.
Expert Opinion=67%
Bakhshi, S. (1997). Framework of epidemiological principles underlying chemical incidents surveillance
plans and training implications for public health practitioners. J Publi c Health Medicine, 19 (3), 333-340.
Describes the application of principles of the epidemiologic investigation of infectious disease to exposure to
hazardous materials. Surveillance is used synonymously with disease investigation in this article. Preliminary steps:
1) Establish the “adverse exposure factor” through analysis of descriptive statistics related to the event; 2) Determine
the appropriate geographic area and nature of the exposure, and define the population at risk; 3) Determine
demographic and injury details, and produce the case definition based on the most commonly recurring symptoms
or factors; 4) Determine appropriate denominators (e.g., whole population or targeted), and calculate rates.
Response Steps: 1) Establish the case definition; 2) Define the population at risk, i.e., the population group or groups
in which the disease or problem could occur; 3) Collect needed data; 4) Manage collected data; 5) Analyze
collected data to determine where the event is occurring, when it occurs, and its rate of occurrence; 6) Develop
causal hypothesis taking into account exposure potential and dose load;
7) Evaluate.
Expert Opinion=51%
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Halperin, W. (1996). The role of surveillance in the hierarchy of prevention.Am J of I ndustri al Medicine,
29, 321-323.
Surveillance is posed not as a prevention intervention in and of itself but “rather a technique for collecting, analyzing,
and using information about the intervention techniques.” Halperin describes surveillance in occupational health as
“the systematic collection and analysis of information concerning hazards, disease, or injury for the purpose of
prevention of occupational disease or injury.”
Expert Opinion=51%
Meriwether, R. (1996). Blueprint for a national public health surveillance 21st century. J. Public Health
Mgmt Practice, 2 (4), 16-23.The author, a physician with the Louisiana State Health Department and a member of the Council of State and
Territorial Epidemiologists, proposes a new “National Public Health Surveillance System” as the conceptual framework
for all public health surveillance and assessment activities into the next century. The organizing principles include: 1)
public health surveillance for any health event (disease, condition, injury, or other outcome) or determinant (behavioral
and biological risk factors, exposures, and medical care) means the ongoing collection, analysis, interpretation, and
dissemination of data for a stated public health purpose; 2) public health assessment includes ongoing surveillance
activities, analytic studies to evaluate hypotheses arising form surveillance data and other sources, and program or
service evaluation; 3) surveillance and assessment efforts need to be prioritized because of limited resources; 4)adequate resources are needed; 5) collaboration within and across systems will be required; 6) goals differ at different
levels of the public health system and over time; 7) surveillance methods and resources should be matched to
surveillance goals; 8) high quality data are needed if surveillance and assessment information are to be relied upon in
public health decision making; 9) confidentiality of public health surveillance data must be assured.
Expert Opinion=50%
Mercy, J., Ikeda, R., & Powell, K. (1998). Firearm-related injury surveillance: An overview of progress
and the challenges ahead. Am J Prev Med, 15 (3S), 6-16.The authors critique current firearm-related injury surveillance systems and elaborate on special issues relating to
firearms injury data. These include: 1) determining the case definition (i.e., the focus of the surveillance system):
should it be limited to firearm-related injury, violence-related injury, or all injury? 2) data collection: reliance on ICD-9-CM E codes is not consistent and will be irrelevant (and replaced) when the ICD-10 is implemented; lack of
standardization across states and within states; lack of product-specific injury data (that is, type of gun); difficulty in
linking data systems.
Expert Opinion=46.5%
Peterson, K. E., & Chen, L. C. (1990). Defining undernutrition for public health purposes in the United
States. J Nutr iti on, 120, 933-942.This 1989 presentation on the identification and prevalence of undernutrition in the U.S. reviews both the necessity of
inconsistent definitions of undernutrition and the dilemmas that causes. The article presents a thorough review of the
impact of manipulating variables within a case definition.
Expert Opinion=42%
Pottinger, J., Herwaltdt, L. A., & Perl, T. M. (1997, July). Basics of surveillance—an overview. Infection
Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 18 (7), 513-526.
Although this article uses cases from hospital infection control for examples, its discussion of components and
processes is relevant to other settings. Surveillance is a dynamic process for gathering, managing, analyzing, and
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reporting data on events that occur in a specific population” (p. 513). Its components include: 1) Defining the event
and the population to be studied; 2) Collecting data either concurrently or retrospectively; 3) Organizing and
managing the data; 4) Analyzing and interpreting the data; 5) Communicating the results. Specific surveillance
methods are described, including:
1) Periodic surveillance: performed on a regular, scheduled, intermittent, and not ongoing basis;
2) Prevalence survey: determine the number of active cases during a specified time period;
3) Targeted surveillance: limit the scope of a process to a single population or sub-population;4) Outbreak thresholds: determine baseline data.
Expert Opinion=24%
Texts and Monographs
Valanis, B. (1992). Disease control and surveillance. In Epidemiology in nur sing and health care (2nd
ed.). Norwalk: Appleton-Lang.
Establishes a list of questions to be answered in preparation for planning a surveillance system:
1. How is a case to be defined, and what is to be reported?
2. Where is the information to come from?3. Who reports it?
4. Who is responsible for it?
5. How frequently is it to be reported or analyzed?
6. What is to be done with the raw data once it is in hand?
7. How is it to be evaluated?
8. Who needs the information?
9. Who will evaluate the generated information? (p. 312)
Valanis suggests that the need for investigation is flagged when interpretation of surveillance data is impossible or
inconclusive.
Text=62%
[NOTE: Valanis heavily relied on the CDC document Guidelines for Evaluating Surveillance Systems (1988,
May 6) ( MMWR Supplement, 37 (S-5), 1-18) in preparation of her chapter. Although it was not presented to the
panel of experts for review, the following information from it is pertinent:
Definition “Epidemiologic surveillance is the ongoing and systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health
data in the process of describing and monitoring a health event. This information is used for the planning,
implementing, and evaluation of public health interventions and programs. Surveillance data are used both to
determine the need for public health action and to assess the effectiveness of programs.”
Components of a surveillance system answer the following questions: 1) What is the population under surveillance?
2) What is the period of time of the data collection? 3) What information is collected? 4) Who provides the
surveillance information? What is the data source? 5) How is the information transferred? 6) How is the information
stored? 7) Who analyzes the data? 8) How are the data analyzed, and how often?
Attributes of a successful surveillance system: 1) simplicity (i.e., the complexity of the system design and its size),
2) flexibility (i.e., the ability to adapt to changing information needs or operating conditions with little additional cost),
3) acceptability (i.e., the willingness of individuals and organizations to participate), 4) sensitivity (i.e., the proportion
of cases detected by the system and its ability to detect trends), 5) predictiveness (i.e., the proportion of persons
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identified as having cases who actually do have the condition under surveillance), 6) representativeness (i.e., the
quality of data), 7) timeliness (i.e., the speed or delay between steps in a system).
Not Reviewed]
Teutsch, S., & Churchill, R. E. (Eds.). (1994).Pri nciples and Practice of Publi c Health Surveil lance . New
York: Oxford Press.
Chpt 1: Historical Development– Authors point out that public health surveillance has been used since the late 1960sas a broader concept than its earlier restricted use in relation to contagious diseases. They suggest it is inherently an
official (i.e., government) function and serves to “tell the health officer where the problems are, who is affected, and
where programmatic and prevention activities should be directed” (p. 8).
Chpt 2: Considerations in Planning a Surveillance System– High-priority health events should be the focus of
surveillance systems, selected based on the following criteria: frequency (e.g., incidence, prevalence, mortality, YPLL);
severity (e.g., case-fatality ratio, hospitalization rate, disability rate); cost (direct and indirect); preventability;
communicability; public interest (p. 20).
Methods for establishing a surveillance system include: 1) achieving a clear case definition that includes criteria for
person, place, and time, criteria to differentiate between a suspected versus a confirmed case, and epidemiological
features; 2) systematic data collection; 3) field testing the system; 4) data analysis; 5) interpretation and dissemination,
including recommendations for action; 6) evaluation. The author acknowledges that “a clear understanding of how
policymakers, voluntary and professional groups, researchers, and other might use surveillance data is valuable in
garnering the support of these audiences for surveillance systems” (p. 27).
Chpt 7: Communicating Information for Action– Suggests adapting a model proposed by Hiebert, Ungurait, and Bohn
as the basis for communicating surveillance results and what they suggest: 1) establish the message; 2) define the
audience; 3) select the channel for communication; 4) market the message by limiting it to the single over-riding
communication objective (i.e., SOCO) which should establish what is new, who is affected, and what works; 5)
evaluate the impact.
Chpt 9: Ethical Issues– Suggests an ethical “checklist” for public health surveillance: 1) Justify the system in terms of
maximizing potential public health benefits and minimizing public and individual harm; 2) Justify use of identified data
and the maintenance of records with identifies; 3) Have surveillance protocols and analytic research reviewed by
colleagues, and share data and findings with colleagues and the public health community at large; 5) Assure the
protection of confidentiality of subjects; 6) Inform health-care providers of conditions germane to their patients; 7)Inform the public, the public health community, and clinicians of findings of surveillance.
Text=60%
Swanson, J., & Nies, M. (1997).Community Health Nursing (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 103-
105.Discusses surveillance as distinct from, but similar to, screening as a “mechanism for the ongoing collection of health
information in a community.” Describes various national data sets and their use for surveillance.
Text=59%
Declich, S., & Carter, A. O. (1994). Public health surveillance: Historical origins, methods and evaluation.Bul letin of the WHO, 72 (2), 285-314.
This document reviews the historical evolution of surveillance as distinct from epidemiology. Although both
surveillance and monitoring involve the routine and ongoing collection of data with methods which are pragmatic and
rapid, surveillance is used to assess population health status before and after an intervention of “health events,”
whereas monitoring implies a constant adjustment of performance in relation to the results. Surveillance deals with
population health events; monitoring looks at specific groups or individuals (p. 288).
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The authors use CDC’s criteria for evaluating surveillance systems. If establishing a new system, they suggest the
following components: 1) justifying need based on the importance of the event, the availability of prevention or
control measures, the need to learn more about the event, its patterns of occurrence and the population at risk, the
need to establish baseline data, and/or available data and alternative sources are not adequate; 2) describing the
objectives (describing the ongoing pattern of disease occurrence and/or linking with public health action and/or
studying the natural history and epidemiology of the event; to provide information and baseline data); 3) defining the
event and the population of concern; 4) collecting and processing data; 5) analyzing and interpreting data; 6)recommending and disseminating public health action; 7) personnel and other resources required; 8) evaluating.
Monograph=48%
Spradley, B., & Allender, J. (1996). Control of communicable diseases: Surveillance measures.
Communi ty health nursing: Concepts and practice (4th ed.). Lippincott, 507-509.
Surveillance is defined in the context of communicable disease control involving three steps: systematic collection
of data pertaining to the occurrence of specific diseases; analysis and interpretation of data; dissemination of
aggregated and processed information for the purposes of program interventions. Uses for surveillance data include
providing a well-accepted basis for planning community interventions as well as measuring change as a result of those
interventions, and identifying population groups at highest risk.Text=46%
Stroup, D., & Teutsch, S. (1998). Statistics in public health: Qualitative approaches to public health
problems. New York: Oxford Press.
Chpt 3: Data Sources for Public Health (p 39-57)
Surveillance is defined as “the ongoing and systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of outcome-specific
data, closely integrated with the timely dissemination of those data to those responsible for preventing and controlling
disease and injury (p. 40). The authors see surveillance as one of a variety of sources of data for public health
decision making, along with vital statistics and the census; surveys; registries; epidemic investigations; research;
program evaluations.
Chpt 4: Monitoring the Health of a Population (p 59-90)
The term “monitoring” applies to the process used to achieve public health surveillance (p 60). Four basic types of
applications are suggested, including identifying new health problems; characterizing geographic and demographic
distributions of health problems; determining temporal trends of known health problems; assessing effectiveness of
interventions or control measures for a health problem.
Steps: 1) Identify the health problem and quantify the geographic and demographic distribution; 2) Decide what will
be monitored, and develop good working definitions for the phenomena being monitored (e.g., causal agents, risk
factors, and health problems); 3) Establish the extent of the geographic area to be monitored; 4) Establish the
frequency with which data will be collected and over what period of time; 5) Establish the nature of the population
to be monitored; 6) Determine how data will be managed; 7) Provide for quality review of the data and its
interpretation.
Text=41%
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Public Health
Interventions Applications for PublicHealth Nursing Practice
Disease & HealthEvent Investigation
Public Health Nursing Practice for the 21st Century March 2001
For Further Information please contact:
Linda Olson Keller at: linda.keller@health.state.mn.us orSue Strohschein at: sue.strohschein@health.state.mn.us
Development of this document was supported by federal grant 6 D10 HP 30392, Division
of Nursing, Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Service Administration,United States Department of Health and Human Services.
Minnesota Department of HealthDivision of Community Health Services
Public Health Nursing Section
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11 Examples of “threats to health” include acts of bioterrorism, chemical or other hazardous waste spills, andnatural disasters such as tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, extreme heat or cold.
12 Not all health events are preventable. Natural disasters cannot be prevented, but public health can
reduce the severity of their impact by taking preventive measures. In these circumstances, public health usually
calls these actions “mitigation” rather than “prevention.”
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Interventions are activities taken by PHNs on behalf of communities
and the individuals and families living in them.
Assumptions about all PHN Interventions...
" They are population-based; that is, they: Sare focused on an entire population
Sare guided by an assessment of community health
Sconsider broad determinants of health
Sconsider all levels of prevention
Sconsider all levels of practice
" The public health nursing process applies at all levels of practice.
INTERVENTION: DISEASE AND OTHER HEALTH EVENT
INVESTIGATION
DefinitionDisease and other health event investigation systematically gathers and analyzes data regarding
threats11 to the health of populations, ascertains the source of the threat, identifies cases and others
at risk, and determines control measures.
The threats may be actual or potential. While investigation traditionally focuses on contagious diseases, it also
may be used with chronic diseases, injury, and other health events. The investigative process consists of
identifying and verifying the source of the threat; identifying cases, their contacts, and others at risk, determining
control measures, and communicating with the public, as needed.
Examples at All Practice Levels
Population-of-interest: Persons displaced by flooding 12
Problem: Potential for disease outbreak
Communi ty Example:
The PHNs spend part of the day doing “rounds” among the rows of people living in a large
emergency shelter set up in a gymnasium. The PHNs talk to the people and ask how everything
is going, given the circumstances. They have concerns about the mental health of this
population who has gone through so much, so they assess for withdrawal, depression, and
inability to cope. While the PHNs note that most adults are coping, they observe that the
children are not coping as well. They question parents and hear stories about night terrors and
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atypical behavior. To prevent further development of problems among children, the PHNs
request child mental health counselors from the Emergency Response team. They also work with
the parents in the shelter to set up a “toddler corner” where children can play and act like
children. Parents take turns staffing the corner. They also set up a “reading corner” for older
children to simulate their school environment.
Systems Example: The PHNs coordinate with local physicians and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to
collect information on contagious diseases systematically among persons who have been
displaced by massive flooding. Most people are living in a large emergency shelter in an old
armory. The group is particularly concerned about potential water-borne disease, since drinking
water is in short supply. They set up a protocol and team for immediate response to isolate all
suspected “cases” and to minimize the potential for disease spread.
I ndividual/Famil y Example [Case-F inding] :
The PHNs hold a daily sick call in the emergency shelter. A mother brings in her three-year-old
with obvious signs and symptoms of chicken pox. The PHN questions the woman about
exposure, and the mother volunteers that she has received a letter from day care about chicken
pox right before the flood. The PHN asks the names of other children who attended the day
care and are also in the shelter. The PHN seeks them out to determine if they should be isolated.
Relationships to Other Interventions
Investigation is a key component of surveillance; these two interventions are often discussed as a single
process. However, the investigation process also stands alone when broadly applied as a data gathering or “fact finding” methodology. In addition, surveillance is prospective, looking ahead for expected events;
investigation is usually retrospective, or initiated in response to an unexpected event. Investigation frequently
leads to case-finding and referral and follow-up.
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Notes from Abby
The PHNs commonly conduct or participate in many different types of disease and other health event
investigations in their regular practice. Examples include investigation of:
• garbage houses
•lice and scabies
• maltreatment of vulnerable individuals
• lead
• food-borne and water-borne outbreaks
• communicable diseases, such as tuberculosis, meningitis, and giardia
• vaccine-preventable disease, such as measles, mumps, rubel
Recommended